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A Bench Warrant is issued by a judge and unless the warrant is 'quashed' or withdrawn by that judge, the hold will stay in effect. However, if there is some untimely delay in picking the inmate up and returning him to the where he is 'wanted' he could file a Writ of Habeus Corpus, the outcome which will have the effect of either releasing him or expediting his return.
48 hours
Depends on what the warrant's for. If they want to get a hold of you, and they find out you're located in another county, they simply ask the County Sheriff's Office in that county to pick you up.
When you have served your period of incarceration in the first county, before they release you they should check to see if there are any other "criminal holds" on you. When they find the bench warrant they will hold you for the other county to come get you and return you to the court that issued the bench warrant.
It's possible that the inmate has charges in another other than the one he is incarcerated in. If so, the facility has to release him into custody of that county.
County hold means that you have a outstanding arrest warrant in another county and you are being held for 10 days. The other county has 10 days to pick you up or you will be released from jail as long as you do not have a case pending in the county you are in jail at.
Counties are only allowed to hold you for 10 days... If the other county doesn't come get you then the county you are in has to let you go!
means if there is more than one warrant out for your arrest in more than one county/state, and the county/state that picks you up originally releases you, you will continue to be held there for up to 72hrs until the county/state with the other warrant picks you up, but they only have 72hrs to do it otherwise they must release you.
My understanding is that they have 90 days to either have you picked up or have to release you to your own recognizance.
Although they can't hold you forever, if you are being held in 'County A' because of an active Warrant in 'County B' AND you are in the same state, there is no maximum hold time set by statute. A warrant from one county within the same state for a violation of a state criminal law holds the same weight, regardless of which county the individual was arrested in.
not at all. However, if GA files an extradition request and SC is the asylum state, then they can( are required to) hold fugitive for 30 days awaiting GA authorities to transport.
Don't understand the question. If the authotrities do not have a warrant, then WHAT are they holding you on? If the 'wanting' jurisdiction has teletyped a "hoild" order until a warrant can be issued, that is sufficient to hold you. If it is an 'in-state violation,' mere knowledge that you are wanted is sufficient.